Several aspects of Let Us Prey don’t make a whole lot of sense. The police in this small Scottish town are all corrupt, at best. And when push comes to shove, they choose to murder one another. For some reason the sergeant wraps himself in barbed wire as he tries to bring the wrath of God onto his subordinate officers. The night starts out with four prisoners being locked up and only one survives. He’s shown emerging from the sea, with ravens, at the start of the movie and he’s never really explained. He’s there to collect the souls of sinners and he seems to be able to control other people. The whole thing turns into a bloodbath before it’s over. In other words, it lacks the subtlety of much Euro-horror that I’ve watched. One thing it does have, though, is plenty of use of the Bible.
I suppose with a title like Let Us Prey such a development shouldn’t be unexpected. Rachel is a new constable in the police station. The story begins with the stranger, Six—the number of his jail cell—nearly being hit by a car. Or having been hit. The teenage driver is arrested and finds a pedophile teacher already in the lock-up. Two other police officers, after having sex in their patrol car, find the stranger and bring him in. The local doctor examines him but when the doctor attacks him, he’s arrested as well. Finally, Six is locked in. It’s discovered that the doctor had murdered his family earlier in the evening, and the reckless driver had earlier hit and killed a classmate while out driving. The pedophile kills himself and the two other police officers murder the doctor. Then the sergeant, who’s a serial killer, comes back to kill everyone left alive. Six and Rachel survive and Six reveals that he’s collecting wicked souls and invites Rachel to join him.
The Bible quotations (some not accurate) all come in the context of retribution. The sinners are to be punished. Rachel, however, escaped a childhood abduction and seems to bear no burden of sin. The other police—who had all decided Rachel should die—end up dead themselves. A gritty, supernatural police story, this film suggests a larger backstory without providing a lot for viewers to go on. The openly Christian sergeant wears a cross, drinks when he drives, and kills his homosexual lovers. Is there perhaps a message that the movie’s trying to convey?
